4.4 Article

Conversion of full nitritation to partial nitritation/anammox in a continuous granular reactor for low-strength ammonium wastewater treatment at 20 °C

Journal

BIODEGRADATION
Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages 87-98

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10532-020-09923-w

Keywords

Nitritation; Anaerobic ammonium oxidation; Granular sludge; Continuous flow reactor; Ambient temperature; Low-strength ammonium wastewater

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41807142, 51878430]
  2. Open Project of National & Local Joint Engineering Laboratory for Municipal Sewage Resource Utilization Technology [2019KF02]
  3. Jiangsu graduate research and practice innovation program, China [SJCX20_1101]
  4. Qinglan Project for Jiangsu Colleges and Universities, China

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The study found that converting full nitritation to partial nitritation/anammox at ambient temperature is feasible for treating low-strength ammonium nitrogen wastewater. High-throughput pyrosequencing results revealed the co-enrichment of different aerobic and anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing bacteria, which may potentially deteriorate the PN/A process.
The feasibility of converting full nitritation to partial nitritation/anammox (PN/A) at ambient temperature (20 degrees C) was investigated in a continuous granular reactor. The process was conducted without anammox bacteria inoculation for the treatment of 70 mg L-1 of low-strength ammonium nitrogen wastewater. Following the stepwise increase of the nitrogen loading rate from 0.84 to 1.30 kg N m(-3) d(-1) in 320 days of operation, the removal efficiency of total inorganic nitrogen (TIN) exceeded 80% under oxygen-limiting conditions. The mature PN/A granules, which had a compact structure and abundant biomass, exhibited a specific TIN removal rate of 0.11 g N g(-1) VSS d(-1) and a settling velocity of 70.2 m h(-1). This was comparable with that obtained at above 30 degrees C in previous reports. High-throughput pyrosequencing results revealed that the co-enrichment of aerobic and anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing bacteria identified as genera Nitrosomonas and Candidatus Kuenenia, which prompted a hybrid competition for oxygen and nitrite with nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB). However, the overgrowth of novel NOB Candidatus Nitrotoga adapted to low temperatures and low nitrite concentration could potentially deteriorate the one-stage PN/A process by exhausting residual bulk ammonium under long-term excessive aeration.

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